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The Impossibility of Metaphysical Closure for Finite Agents

Preface I have been searching back and forth for a long time, trying out many partial approaches and incomplete answers. Each attempt illuminated something, but none of them fully resolved the problem. What follows is the first explanation that actually closes the issue. It is simple, structural, and does not depend on any special metaphysical assumptions. It shows, in a straightforward way, why no finite agent can ever achieve a complete and final account of all truths. Abstract This paper argues that no finite agent can ever achieve metaphysical closure — the idea that an agent’s reasons, concepts, and methods could cover the entire space of possible propositions. The core issue is structural: a finite agent’s justificatory resources are fixed and determinate, while the total space of propositions it faces is not. Because the agent cannot determine or survey the full range of possible propositions, it cannot know whether its resources cover that range. From this mismatch alone, w...

A Tiny Universe and the Impossibility of Metaphysical Closure

  A Tiny Universe and the Impossibility of Metaphysical Closure Kenneth Myers Abstract This paper introduces a Tiny Universe (TU) : the simplest possible epistemic universe containing only three ingredients—an observer, a world‑state, and a translation method that turns the world into something the observer can understand. This minimal structure is enough to reveal a universal limitation: an observer never has direct access to the world itself, only to the translated output produced by their own method of access. Because the observer cannot step outside this translation method to evaluate its completeness or accuracy, they cannot determine whether their picture of the world is final or complete. The TU shows that this limitation is not a feature of complex metaphysical theories but a structural fact that arises in any universe containing an observer. From this, it follows that metaphysical closure—the idea of a complete, self‑contained explanation of reality—is impossible in p...

The Impossibility of Metaphysical Closure

  The Impossibility of Metaphysical Closure: Ontic and Epistemic Limits on Complete Metaphysical Systems Kenneth Myers Abstract This paper argues that metaphysical closure—the aspiration to produce a complete and final account of what exists and why—is impossible in principle. The argument proceeds by distinguishing two independent forms of uncertainty: ontic uncertainty, in which reality itself leaves certain propositions unsettled, and epistemic uncertainty, in which agents are structurally unable to know or justify certain truths. I show that each form of uncertainty independently undermines the possibility of a closed metaphysical system. When combined, they yield a general Impossibility Theorem of Metaphysical Closure. The result is not merely epistemological: it reveals something fundamental about the nature of existence itself. 1 Introduction The history of metaphysics is marked by recurring attempts to produce a complete, final, and closed account of reality. F...

Modern Technology and the Marginal Value of DNA

HBI — Kenneth Myers — 2026‑04‑09 — 14% Definition of the HBI This is a speculation whose assumptions are unclear even to its author. It concerns the question of whether modern technology is increasing or decreasing the marginal value of DNA — that is, the value of one more unit of genetic information in a world increasingly dominated by computation, data, and synthetic systems. The Half‑Baked Thought “ Is DNA becoming obsolete, or is it becoming the most programmable substrate in history?” For most of human history, DNA was the ultimate blueprint. It determined survival, reproduction, and the slow drift of evolution. But modern technology has begun to erode the monopoly of DNA on shaping outcomes. We now have: machines that outperform biological senses algorithms that out‑predict biological intuition synthetic materials that outlast biological tissues cultural evolution that moves faster than genetic evolution and soon, perhaps, artificial agents that out‑strategize bi...

Are Human and Artificial Intelligence a Martingale Against Each Other?

HBI — Kenneth Myers — 2026‑04‑0 8 — 11% Definition of the HBI This is a speculation whose assumptions are unclear even to its author. It explores whether the long‑term interaction between human intelligence and artificial intelligence behaves like a martingale — a process whose expected future value equals its present value, no matter how much information you have. The Half‑Baked Thought A martingale is a strange creature: a process that, despite accumulating history, refuses to drift. No matter what has happened so far, the expected next step is… the same. This raises a mischievous question: What if the co‑evolution of human and artificial intelligence is a martingale? Not in the strict probabilistic sense — that would require assumptions no sane person would make — but in the conceptual sense that: every gain in AI capability forces humans to adapt, every gain in human capability forces AI to be redesigned, and the “expected advantage” of either side remains roughly cons...